Friday, 29 September 2023

Swaziland Newsletter No. 796 – 29 September 2023

 

Swaziland Newsletter No. 796 – 29 September 2023

News from and about Swaziland, compiled by Global Aktion, Denmark (www.globalaktion.dk) in collaboration with Swazi Media Commentary (www.swazimedia.blogspot.com), and sent to all with an interest in Swaziland - free of charge.

 

Parliamentary vote set for Eswatini, Africa’s last absolute monarchy

By Agence France-Presse, 26 September 2023

SOURCE 

The last absolute monarchy in Africa, the Kingdom of Eswatini, will hold parliamentary elections on Friday (29 September 2023), with political parties banned from contesting.

The constitution emphasises “individual merit” as the basis for selecting lawmakers, who cannot be affiliated with any political group. Being in the good graces of King Mswati III, who wields absolute power, also carries much weight.

About 585,000 registered voters will be called to choose 59 members of the lower house of parliament, which plays only an advisory role to the monarch. Mswati, who can veto any legislation, will directly appoint another 10 lawmakers.

With most candidates loyal to the king, the election is unlikely to change the political scenery in the kingdom formerly known as Swaziland.

Only about a dozen of those nominated during primaries last month are known to have ties to the opposition.

Many do not say which side they are on, fearing repression.

“Democracy is not that much practised around here,” Thantaza Silolo, spokesperson for the largest opposition group, the Swaziland Liberation Movement (Swalimo), told AFP.

Political parties have unclear status and cannot directly take part in the vote.

They were effectively banned in 1973, but a new constitution in 2005 provided an opening allowing for freedom of association. Still, in practice, there is no legal avenue for them to register, according to democracy watchdog Freedom House. Swalimo is incorporated as a non-profit.

The People’s United Democratic Movement, one of the largest opposition movements, has been declared a “terrorist” organisation and banned.

Bottom of Form

Two opposition lawmakers elected in the last vote in 2018 are currently in jail. A third is in exile.

Most opposition groupings have called for a boycott. Three have told voters to go to the polls.

Few political gatherings have taken place during a two-week campaigning period.

Polls will open at 7am local time (05:00 GMT) and close at 6pm, according to the electoral commission, with results expected over the weekend.

The mountainous country of 1.2 million people is landlocked between South Africa and Mozambique. About half the size of Belgium, it gained independence from the United Kingdom in 1968.

Mswati, 55, ascended to the throne at the age of 18 and has ruled with an iron fist for 37 years.

The king is constitutionally above the law.

He appoints the prime minister and the cabinet, can dissolve parliament and the government and commands police and the army.

Shows of dissent are rare, but in 2021 the kingdom was shaken by pro-democracy protests. Dozens of people were killed as security forces violently quashed demonstrations calling for reforms. A curfew was imposed, demonstrations banned and internet access curbed.

Protests have continued sporadically after the crackdown.

Earlier this year, human rights lawyer and government critic Thulani Maseko, was shot dead through the window of his home. Hours before his murder, the king had warned activists who defy him not to “shed tears” about “mercenaries killing them”.

The United Nations has called for an independent investigation.

Known as Ngwenyama, “the lion” in SiSwati, the king has been widely criticised for his lavish lifestyle, while nearly 60 percent of the population lives on less than $1.90 a day.

The plump monarch, who usually appears in public wearing traditional clothes, is known to love luxury cars and watches. He spends millions of dollars a year on his 15 wives, some of whom he married when they were minors, and has at least 25 children.

To mark the 50th anniversary of independence, in 2018 he changed the country’s name to Eswatini – meaning land of the Swazis.

Eswatini has one of the highest prevalences of HIV in the world with about 26 percent of adults aged 15 to 49 living with the AIDS-causing virus in 2022, according to UN figures.

See also

Increased security likely nationwide during and following general election

https://crisis24.garda.com/alerts/2023/09/eswatini-increased-security-likely-nationwide-during-and-following-general-election-sept-29

eSwatini’s sham election: Medieval feudalism debases all Africa

https://www.citizen.co.za/news/opinion/eswatini-sham-election-medieval-feudalism/

Eswatini gears up for 'democratic elections' this Friday... with no parties and an absolute monarch

https://www.news24.com/news24/africa/news/eswatini-gears-up-for-democratic-elections-this-friday-with-no-parties-and-an-absolute-monarch-20230928

Launch of the African Union Election Observation Mission to the 29 September 2023 General Elections in the Kingdom of Eswatini

https://au.int/en/pressreleases/20230925/launch-african-union-election-observation-mission-29-september-2023-general

Special voting smooth sailing – EBC

http://new.observer.org.sz/details.php?id=21200

 

LGBTIQ+ application to be registered declined

By Mbongiseni Ndzimandze, Times of eSwatini (print edition) 28 September 2023

MBABANE: Minister of Commerce, Industry and Trade Manqoba Khumalo has declined the application by the LGBTIQ+ community to have their association registered.

He found that the objects of the proposed association sought to offend against the customary principles as preserved in the Eswatini Law and Custom, that a man and a woman should start and maintain a love relationship.

The minister’s decision comes after the Supreme Court referred their registration application to him. This was after the Registrar of Companies, Msebe Malinga, declined to register the Eswatini Sexual and Gender Minorities (ESGM), which is a company in the course of formation. The application was referred to the minister, because Malinga had already made a decision over the matter.

The court ordered the minister to consider the application for registration afresh and advise the appellants of his decision in writing. The minister communicated his decision through a letter dated September 27, 2023. The letter was written and signed by Acting Minister of Commerce, Industry and Trade David ‘Cruiser’ Ngcamphalala.

“Inasmuch as the Constitution of the Kingdom of Eswatini in Section 20, prohibits discrimination against any person on the grounds listed thereof, there is nothing that suggests the intention of the Constitution to include sexual orientation and gender identity as grounds for discrimination,” said the minister. He said in the absence of a clear prohibition of discrimination on the basis of sexual orientation and gender identity in the Constitution, the principles and rules of Roman Dutch Law were still enforceable as the common law of the country in terms of Section 252 of the Constitution.

“In exercise of powers given unto me in terms of Section 27(30 of the Companies Act/2009, I, therefore, decline your clients application to register the company. By the copy hereof, I direct the registrar of companies not to register Eswatini Sexual and Gender Minorities,” said the minister.

Melusi Simelane, in his capacity as the Director of ESGM, together with Senele Mdluli, Mbali Dlamini, Thuthu Magagula, Mary Da Silva, Sibongile Nxumalo and Thandekile Maziya, were the applicants in the matter.

They had taken the registrar of companies, minister of Commerce Industry and Trade and attorney general to court to review and set aside the registrar’s decision to refuse to register their association.

When they were unsuccessful at the High Court, they approached the Supreme Court on appeal. The appeal was heard by Judge Phesheya Dlamini, who, during the hearing of the matter, said ‘there is something wrong with anybody who says there are no gays and lesbians in Eswatini’.

During arguments of the appeal, Lawyer Sibusiso Nhlabatsi, who was representing the appellants, said government seemingly emphasised on sexual intercourse and ignored the objects of the association they intended to register.

He told the court that the LGBTIQ+ members were Christians and they fellowshipped. He said they were not calling upon the court to legalise what was illegal. Government was represented by Principal Crown Counsel Ndabehle Dlamini.

 

Multi-million drugs shortage scandal: Exposed SwaziPharm Wholesalers Director Kareem Ashraf runs to Robison Bertram lawyers, wants Auditor General (AG) to release investigation report.

By Zweli Martin Dlamini, Swaziland News, 24 September, 2023

SOURCE 

MBABANE: Kareem Ashraf, the Director of SwaziPharm Wholesalers (PTY)LTD has written a letter to the Auditor General (AG) Timothy Matsebula, demanding the release of the investigation report into health crisis.

The letter in possession of this Swaziland News and dated 24th September 2023, was also addressed to Prime Minister Cleopas Sipho Dlamini, Finance Minister Neal Rijikernberg, and Attorney General (AG) Sifiso Khumalo.

“Our instructions therefore are to demand as we hereby do that you cause to be produced for our copying (at our cost), the “Forensic Investigation Report into Allegations of irregularities Related to Procurement, Acquisition and Distribution of Medicines to Public Health Facilities in Eswatini” that was purportedly carried out by Funduzi Forensic Services (Pty) Limited within forty eight (48) hours of receipt of this correspondence”, reads the letter in part.

Zweli Jele, the Robison Bertram senior lawyer representing Ashraf, SwaziPharm and David Melvin had not responded at the time of compiling this report.

Efforts to reach the Auditor General proved unsuccessful at the time of compiling this report.

On another note, Ashraf, through his lawyers indicated in the letter that he wants to take the report to court for review.

This comes after this publication released an investigative story exposing how Ashraf and his alleged syndicate looted the Ministry of Health, resulting to a health crisis.

 

Cancer patients at risk as lab tools break down

By Sithembile Hlatshwayo, Times of eSwatini, 27 September 2023

SOURCE 

MBABANE: Cancer patients receiving chemotherapy are stranded, following the breakdown of the laboratory tools used to blend their drugs.

This has resulted in patients waiting for the treatment for months, since June. In an interview, one of the patients stated that he was supposed to start the chemotherapy treatment in June 30, 2023, but to date he had undergone it. The patient said he was told by nurses at the Moneni Cancer Hospital, which also provided chemotherapy, that they would call to notify him once they were ready with the treatment. He said they, however, did not explain the challenges they were facing. According to the patient, his fears were that his condition was worsening and by the time help was available, it would already be at an advanced stage. He said he also approached the Mbabane Government Hospital, where he was diagnosed following the challenges, and was told that there were no drugs but he was referred to Manzini.

Other patients also confirmed to have been through the same challenge and said they were frustrated by that no explanation was being made, except that nurses promised to notify them when the treatment is available. A reliable source close to the matter, who preferred to remain anonymous, said the blending machine for the cancer drugs had broken down and cracked a glass, which made it difficult to mix the drugs. The source said following the breaking down of the machine at the cancer hospital in Manzini, the blending was done at the Mbabane Government Hospital, where also the glass broke.

She said the machine was being repaired. The source further mentioned that from the first quarter (April to January) they had been unable to get companies who could tender for cancer drugs because most of the time patients were being transferred to South Africa (SA). The source said they then purchase a few drugs, which made the vendors less interested. According to the source, recently they were able to tender for the cancer treatment successfully, such that government was now ready to receive the drug tenders. She said government,  through the support of sponsors could now purchase the drugs. However, she said there was currently minimum stock, which they could assist patients with.

Swaziland Democratic Nurses Union (SWADNU) Secretary General (SG) Mayibongwe Masangane said cancer had to be treated delicately and it was wrong for patients to lack treatment.

The SG said the reason the patient was not being contacted by the nurses was that there was still no drugs. Masangane said what was painful was that cancer advanced at a high rate in other parts of the body when one has not started the chemotherapy. “This means that if the cancer progresses, it may reach a point where the patient cannot be treated.” Masangane said chances of the patients surviving were reduced when each day passed by without them receiving the much needed chemotherapy, which is why, as SWADNU, they referred to the drugs and medicine shortage as a silent genocide. “In other countries people die through the barrel of the gun, but here they die because of diseases which could be prevented if there were drugs.”

Masangane said the situation was a painful one and nothing showed to be improving in the health system despite government assuring that they were addressing the state of affairs and drugs were being delivered. For those patients who had already begun the chemotherapy and were no longer receiving it, Masangane said they could end up stopping the procedure all together, as the cancer was advancing. He said the stage the country was in meant that emaSwati would get sick and die. Masangane said even if government brought specialist doctors it would not help because there were no drugs and medicine supplies in the country.

 

Nomalungelo Simelane’s brave stand for democracy in Eswatini

By Agence France-Presse, 28 September 2023

SOURCE 

The king does not take kindly to dissent in Africa’s last absolute monarchy.

But it doesn’t stop political opponent Nomalungelo Simelane from taking a rare stand for democracy in Eswatini, formerly known as Swaziland.

The 44-year-old parliamentary candidate, also known as LaZwide, has been sharing her message at campaign rallies ahead of Friday’s parliamentary elections.

Political parties are banned in the hilly, landlocked country between South Africa and Mozambique, and lawmakers cannot be affiliated with political groups.

King Mswati III appoints the prime minister, cabinet and judges, while acts of parliament need his seal of approval to come into force.

“We are not allowed to be free, we don’t have free speech,” LaZwide told AFP on Wednesday, before addressing a few hundred supporters in a muddy stadium in Siphofaneni, a town around 80 kilometres (50 miles) from the capital Mbabane.

“If you speak the truth, then you find yourself in exile, you find yourself in jail.”

Wearing sturdy boots in the stadium drizzle, the former gospel singer said she entered politics as an MP in by-elections last year, taking the seat of her pro-democracy husband who was hounded by the regime and forced into exile.

“I am not a politician but I’m making a lot of noise around here,” she said.

Campaign rallies are rare in Eswatini, where the electoral campaign runs for just two weeks.

In its streets, posters are few and far between and there are no televised political debates to tune into in the evening.

For 50 years, political parties have been banned — candidates for the 59 seats up for grabs in Friday’s ballot cannot be affiliated to any political group under the constitution.

Most of the candidates are loyal to the king.

Two opposition lawmakers elected in the last vote in 2018 are currently in jail.

“Yes I have been scared,” LaZwide acknowledged.

Two years ago, she fled the country with her husband and their five children when security forces violently quashed demonstrations calling for reforms, leaving around 40 people dead, she said.

With the help of her religious faith and a strong personal conviction that she should take up the baton from her husband, she came home, alone.

To read more of this report, click here

https://www.thesouthafrican.com/news/nomalungelo-simelanes-brave-stand-for-democracy-in-eswatini-breaking-28-september-2023/?utm_term=Autofeed&utm_medium=Social&utm_source=Facebook&fbclid=IwAR2IvI7eo7l6SpOdgCxzJNQaw6qVRlw8V6uOrdx8dGJUl-dOoAJWXeMbxUo#Echobox=1695910612

 

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Friday, 22 September 2023

Swaziland Newsletter No. 795 – 22 September 2023

 

Swaziland Newsletter No. 795 – 22 September 2023

News from and about Swaziland, compiled by Global Aktion, Denmark (www.globalaktion.dk) in collaboration with Swazi Media Commentary (www.swazimedia.blogspot.com), and sent to all with an interest in Swaziland - free of charge.

 

We’ve lost hope – nurses

By Sifiso Nhlabatsi and Siboniso Nkambule, eSwatini Observer, 16 September 2023

SOURCE 

The on-going problem with drug shortages is rising to the level of ‘disaster’ as nurses have said they have lost hope that the situation would be solved anytime soon.

The healthcare workers said the drug shortages continue to take an enormous toll on them as they must deal with the problem on a daily basis, and also on patients who are on the receiving end of the shortages.

They said some of the medication in short supply or lacking, were Endotracheal tubes which serve to provide oxygen and inhaled gases to the lungs and protects the lungs from contamination, such as gastric contents or blood. These are used in the theatre.

Beside the Endotracheal tubes, the healthcare workers said there was a serious shortage of diagnostic agents and vaccines for below five years.

It was also revealed that the theatre were among the most affected departments as they were working on tight schedules.

The healthcare workers further revealed that some patients were told to go and buy what is required before an operation.

The situation, according to the healthcare workers, got worse each day, accusing government of making unfulfiled promises.

This comes as some patients were yesterday turned back at the Mbabane Government Hospital and Raleigh Fitkin Memorial Hospital  in Manzini as a result of the drug shortages and other medical equipment. 

Further compounding the situation for the patients is that their last place of hope, The Luke Commission, has revealed that it was faced with financial challenges, which may result in the facility closing its doors to patients.    

With the high costs of medication at pharmacies and also private hospitals, patients end up at The Luke Commission where they are treated free of charge by trained specialists and also get free medication.

However, The Luke Commission due to the financial challenges may close its doors to patients as the numbers continue to increase. Last year, the facility attended to 217 363 outpatient visits and for this year, projections are 274 578 outpatients’ visits and for next year, it is projected that the visits will shoot up to 337 420.

To read more of this report, click here

http://new.observer.org.sz/details.php?id=21125

 

Double celebration or double tragedy? Swaziland spends big on 55/55 celebration

By Dr Jabulane Matsebula (PUDEMO representative in Australia), Swati Newsweek, 17 September, 2023

SOURCE 

On April 2023, I wrote an essay in response to the government's decision to spend large sums of public money on celebrating King Mswati’s 55th birthday and 55 years of Swaziland's independence. I called this decision insensitive and the celebration senseless for various reasons.

Firstly, the country has a large external and public debt. It also has a high and persistent unemployment rate. Instead of borrowing more money for meaningless celebrations, the government priority should be on the things that matter, the healthcare sector, poverty reduction, economic growth and job creation. Spending more public monies on lavish celebrations can only increase the size of the current public debt. Swaziland’s external debt is also exploding. It is forecast to continuously increase between 2023 and 2028.

An International Monetary Fund (IMF) report in 2023 shows that “public debt rose to an estimated 42.3 percent of GDP by end FY22/23.” This level of debt is colossal and unacceptable. Swaziland is in deep debt, but the country continues to spend like a drunken sailor on activities with little or no economic value. The IMF report also shows that the country is struggling to pay back loans. For example, “the ratio of non-performing loans to total loans increased to 6.5 percent at end-June 2022, from 5.6 percent a year earlier.”

Secondly, the open display of opulence during the “double celebration” is grotesque and insensitive to the large section of the population living in poverty. According to a World Food Programme report in 2022, "69 per cent of the rural population live below the national poverty line and 25 percent are extremely poor".

When King Mswati hosted a lavish banquet on 5 September 2023 for his family and cronies, tens of thousands of families in rural areas went to bed hungry.

Thirdly, many people would also find these lavish celebrations irresponsible and insensitive to the sick who have limited or no access medical care. This government has presided over the total collapse of the healthcare system. In the past few weeks, there has been widespread media reports of acute shortages of medicines in hospitals.

One of the largest hospitals in the country was declared technically insolvent because it is not adequately funded. The images of lavish cerebration banquets are sickening and lack sense of moral responsibility. While the king and his cronies were dinning on lobsters and expensive wine, 69 per cent of the rural population was struggling to put a meal on the table.

Fourthly, I see no reasons for celebrations. What is there to celebrate? Mswati and the so-called independence celebration are a double whammy for the country. It is a double tragedy that we are celebrating the birth of a tyranny and an independence that never was. Swaziland was granted independence by the British colonial empire on 6 September 1968. King Mswati was born in April that year to steal from the poor and rule the country with an iron fist.

He is a curse to the Swazi nation. Swaziland independence lasted for four years and seven months before it was taken away by King Mswati’s father on 12 April 1973.

For many Swazis, the struggle for freedom continues. It is not yet Uhuru!

 

Plot to kidnap 3 persons with albinism amid elections

By Sibusiso Shange, Times of eSwatini, 15 September 2023

SOURCE 

MBABANE: Beliefs around the harvesting of body parts of people with albinism for good luck is still rife.

This is because the organisation of persons with albinism recorded three cases of attempted kidnappings since the beginning of the ongoing general elections in the country. This was disclosed by the President of the Persons with Albinism organisation in the country, Philemon Gama, in an interview yesterday.

Eswatini has been one of the African countries where a belief that human body parts, in particular those of persons with albinism, could help people win elections, has been a concern. The concern has resulted in authorities and other sectors of society in the African continent joining hands in warning people against the unfounded belief. However, apart from navigating the threats that come with such a belief, it was found that albinism does not affect an individual’s social development.  

It is a health condition that does not get worse or aggravated over time and does not exhibit any changes to life expectancy. In the case of the organisation, which falls under the Deputy Prime Minister’s Office in the country, Gama said they had since recommended to social workers that their affected members be relocated to places of safety.

By places of safety, Gama said he meant that their members be relocated to other relatives, where they would be out of danger. “As you know that our organisation falls under the Deputy Prime Minister’s Office, we recommended to the social workers that families of the affected members be engaged so that our members could be relocated to other relatives,” he said.

Gama stated that even though the organisation did not have tangible evidence linking the kidnappings to the ongoing elections, they could not turn a blind eye to the fact that some people still had the notion that body parts of people with albinism could help them win the elections. He said the belief was not only in Eswatini, but in other African countries, which were also in the elections process.

Gama stated that the organisation was of the idea that their affected members would remain in hiding until the end of the ongoing general elections. This, Gama said, was likely to deprive their members their constitutional right to participate in the formation of the new government.

Worth noting is that when dissolving the 11th Parliament, His Majesty King Mswati III came out clear and warned the nation against the belief that human body parts could help anyone win elections. The King warned that there should be no strange disappearances of people during the course of the general elections.

To read more of this report, click here

http://www.times.co.sz/news/141871-plot-to-kidnap-3-persons-with-albinism-amid-elections.html

 

‘We’re being abused even by male police officers’

By Nkosingiphile Myeni, eSwatini Observer, 19 September 2023

SOURCE 

Some male members of the Royal Eswatini Police Service (REPS) are being accused by sex-workers of abusing them while they go about their illegal business in the country’s streets.

This transpired at the National Sex-workers indaba held this week where four sex workers extracted the files on the police for human rights abuses.

However, the police, who were said to have been invited, were not present during the meeting.

During the event, which was organised by the Non-Governmental Organisation (NGO) known as Voice Of Our Voices (VOOV), it was stated that there are 12 000 known sex workers in the country.

Part of the event also focused on the dissemination of Integrated Bio-behavioural Surveillance Survey (IBBSS), which states that globally, the Key Populations (KPs) which are subpopulations within the general population, including sex workers are at higher risk of HIV exposure because they engage in highly stigmatised behaviours and often are marginalised in their communities.

The sex-workers are also said to be called sex-workers because they admitted to be making an income from ‘selling sex.’

Sharing their testimonials where information on HIV/AIDS programmes for Key Populations, including female sex workers, three of the four sex workers shared gritty encounters with the police.

Stakeholders studying sex-workers said rape among sex-workers was still happening unabated.

Bee Dlamini (not her real name) from Manzini said she was assaulted all over the body by the police.

“I was bed-ridden for days and failed to go out to hustle for my children,” she said to the attentive audience of over 200 people in attendance.

She said she tried to report the matter against the police officers, whom she did not disclose, but her efforts were watered down by the officers she found at the police station, who called her with offensive words.

She said officers at the police station said she reeked and ordered her to get out of their sight.
She said she was part of the sex-workers plying their trade at the city centres, however, each time they would see the police, they evade them.

She said the patrolling police would chase after them, extract them from their hiding places and assault them.

After the question and answer session as soon as the panel had shared their experiences, one of the sex-workers claimed a police officer picked her from the road and diverted her to a forest, where he drew a gun.

She said the officer placed the firearm on his thigh and ordered her to perform acts which cannot be repeated for ethical reasons.

To read more of this report, click here

http://new.observer.org.sz/details.php?id=21139

 

SNAT Secretary General Lot Vilakati: Numbers at Extraordinary General Meeting, a clear indication that members are ready to defend their President

By Colani Khulekani Maseko, Swaziland News, 16 September, 2023

SOURCE 

MANZINI: Lot Vilakati, the Secretary General (SG) of the Swaziland National Association of Teachers (SNAT) says, the hundreds of teachers who attended the Extraordinary General Meeting (EGM) is a clear indication that, they are ready to defend their President Mbongwa Dlamini and the union.

Speaking to this Swaziland News on Saturday morning, Vilakati further said,as the National Executive Committee (NEC) they will continue to stand with their dismissed President.

Mbongwa Dlamini, the SNAT President, was dismissed by the Teaching Service Commission (TSC) for alleged absenteeism, he was persecuted for representing teachers.

“The hundreds of teachers who attended the Extraordinary General Meeting is a clear indication that they are ready to defend their President and Union. As the leadership as well, we will continue to stand by our President all the way. We also applaud the media for always covering our struggles as teachers,” said the SNAT Secretary General. 

Hundreds of teachers convened at the SNAT Centre in Manzini on Friday to deliberate on a way forward regarding the dismissal of their President Mbongwa Ernest Dlamini, among other issues.

 

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Friday, 15 September 2023

Swaziland Newsletter No. 794 – 15 September 2023

 

Swaziland Newsletter No. 794 – 15 September 2023

News from and about Swaziland, compiled by Global Aktion, Denmark (www.globalaktion.dk) in collaboration with Swazi Media Commentary (www.swazimedia.blogspot.com), and sent to all with an interest in Swaziland - free of charge.

eSwatini turns 55 with Taiwan present... and democracy absent

By Lenin Ndebele, News 24 (South Africa) 6 September 2023

SOURCECurrent Time 

Fresh from the Umhlanga Reed Dance, Eswatini will on Wednesday commemorate what it termed "55/55 double celebrations", combining independence celebrations with the birthday of the last absolute monarch in Africa, King Mswati III. 

The Reed Dance is a five-day event where young women and unmarried girls are assembled to cut reeds for the yearly repairs to the windbreaks of the queen mother's village.

Some of the notable guests at the ceremony were former Botswana president Ian Khama and his South African counterpart Jacob Zuma, King Letsie III of Lesotho, and Zulu King Misuzulu.

Taiwanese President Tsai Ing-wen arrived in Eswatini on Tuesday. She will attend the king's birthday celebrations and the country's Independence Day commemorations.

Eswatini is Taiwan's last declared ally in Africa, with the rest of the continent aligning itself with China, which claims Taiwan as a Chinese territory.

According to the Eswatini government, it entered into agreements with Taiwan, including on micro-financing for startups by women and cooperation between Taiwan's state development company and the Eswatini Petroleum Company.

Prime Minister Cleopas Sipho Dlamini said the celebrations would mark Eswatini's 55 years of advancement and development as a kingdom.

He said: “We have schools now, road infrastructure, and other things that we didn't have in the past. We have a reason to celebrate.”

The World Bank says Eswatini's gross domestic product (GDP) growth slowed to 0.4% in 2022 from 7.9% in 2021. This was due to a poor agricultural season and political unrest.

The 2021 Labour Force Survey placed the unemployment rate at 33.3%, the highest in a decade. The report also states that 55% of AmaSwati earn below the poverty line, and 60% of the country lives in poverty.

The kingdom also has one of Southern Africa's highest HIV prevalence rates standing at 27% for people between the ages of 15 and 49.

For pro-democracy activists, there's little worth celebrating.

The Foundation for Socio-Economic Justice (FSEJ) a civic grouping, called for the release of one of the most prominent political prisoners – two legislators, Mduduzi Bacede Mabuza and Mthandeni Dube.

The two have been in custody for more than two years and face up to 20 years in prison.

FSEJ's statement attributed to executive director Thabo Masuku reads: “It is extremely worrying that the Eswatini government continues to silence activists and human rights defenders through the use of the judicial system.”

"The judiciary should independently uphold the values of justice and equity — not harass and intimidate pro-democracy activists like Mabuza and Dube."

Civil society in Eswatini is still shocked after the cold-blooded murder of human rights lawyer Thulani Maseko in January.

The government has distanced itself from the killing, and no headway has been made in investigations.

Maseko was the leader of the Swaziland Multi-Stakeholder Forum, a coalition of pro-democracy groups. 

In December last year, they met in Mbombela, Mpumalanga, to adopt the eBundu Declaration.

This was a strategy to push for the abdication of the king and the boycott of the Tinkhundla electoral system.

The Tinkhundla, which is the kingdom's general elections, will be held on 29 September.

At present, Eswatini is operating without a parliament after Mswati III dissolved it in late July to make way for the elections.

 

SNAT can’t be separated from politics – Mbongwa

By Themba Zwane, Times of eSwatini, 12 September 2023

SOURCE 

PIGGS’ PEAK: SNAT President Mbongwa Dlamini is of the view that it is impossible to separate the union from politics.

Responding to allegations that the union was deviating from its mandate, Dlamini said SNAT operated within the confines of the law. “When laws related to education are made, SNAT is invited to make submissions in Parliament,” he said. Dlamini made an example of the Examinations Council Bill and the Employment Bill, saying SNAT must have an input in such Bills before they are enacted. He said the process of law-making, in its nature, was a political activity. “Are these members then implying that we should not take part in these political activities?” he asked rhetorically.

He added that the problem was that most emaSwati thought politics had to do with power struggle, which was a wrong notion. He said they only engaged on issues that had to do with SNAT members’ well-being. “There is no way we can divorce politics from SNAT because all that affects teachers’ welfare is as a result of a political decision. When you deal with government, which is a political structure, only political issues will be discussed. Teachers’ salary adjustment is a political issue as it is handled by a political structure. Politics is life,” he said. On his dismissal issue, the president asked not to respond, but said they welcomed the opinion of members who felt his dismissal was justified.  He said they must explain their position and convince members during their mass meeting on Friday so they could decide on what they wanted. 

 

eSwatini Violence Against Children and Youth Survey (VACS) report 2022

In 2023, Eswatini launched its 2022 VACS report, which presents the main indicators from its second VACS.

VACS data shows that, from 2007 to 2022, there were notable reductions in all forms of violence against girls and young women in Eswatini.

Read the full report here

https://www.togetherforgirls.org/en/resources/eswatini-violence-against-children-and-youth-survey-vacs-report-2022-data-collection-2021

 

eSwatini increases HIV preventative options to reduce new infections

World Health Organization, 12 September 2023

SOURCE 

The kingdom of Eswatini has made major strides in the HIV response with the goal of ending AIDS as a public health threat by 2030.  The country is the first in the region to have accomplished the 95-95-95 treatment targets in 2020 with an associated steady decline in HIV incidence from 1.44 in 2016 to 0.62 in 2021 among adults (aged 15 years and older). This incidence is equivalent to about 4000 New HIV infections per year. The epidemic has shifted from what was traditionally known as a generalized epidemic to a micro-epidemic impacting different population groups in diverse ways. Adolescent girls and young women (AGYW), sex workers (SW), and men who have sex with men have a high vulnerability to HIV infection.

The country has developed a core set of proven effective HIV prevention strategies and aims to increase the uptake of high-impact services, such as condoms, HIV testing and counseling (HTC), prevention of mother-to-child transmission (PMTCT), antiretroviral therapy (ART), Post Exposure Prophylaxis (PEP), Pre-Exposure Prophylaxis (PrEP) and voluntary medical male circumcision (VMMC), according to the unique risks and vulnerabilities within each priority population. In particular, the use of PrEP has been scaled up over the years acting as a preventative measure against the spread of HIV. The Expansion of HIV prevention services including ART coverage (treatment as prevention) and the introduction of oral PrEP into the country, has contributed to the drop in HIV new infections.

In September 2015, the World Health Organization (WHO) recommended that people at substantial risk of HIV infection should be offered PrEP as a prevention method, and as part of a comprehensive package. In 2016, WHO’s initial role in the introduction of PrEP in Eswatini included providing technical guidance during in-country policy dialogues. WHO also supported the development of a National PrEP framework. PrEP was introduced in the country through a pilot study using the demonstration approach. At the time, the annual number of HIV new infections was estimated to be at 7000 according to the Eswatini HIV Incidence measurement survey conducted in 2016. The Ministry of Health (MOH) worked closely with WHO and partners including Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF) and Clinton Health Access Initiative (CHAI)  to develop the study protocol and also mobilized resources to support the study implementation or demonstration projects. These were meant to assess the operationalization of PrEP as an additional HIV prevention method offered in public and private facilities. WHO support to the Ministry included the provision of technical support in developing an implementation framework to guide the demonstration projects and served in the core team coordinating the implementation of the pilot study. In 2018, the country introduced oral PrEP through the implementation of demonstration projects in 22 facilities to assess acceptability, feasibility and to monitor side effects and seroconversion for 18 months.

The results showed that offering oral PrEP to clients identified at substantial risk was feasible and acceptable in Eswatini. In addition, expanding access to PrEP encouraged more people to know their HIV status, provided an opportunity to discuss individual risks, and increased clients’ understanding and awareness of their HIV risk, offering further opportunities to provide expanded access to both HIV prevention services and, if a person tests positive, treatment services. Following these findings, WHO provided technical support to translate the findings into policy. In 2019, WHO technically supported the country to develop PrEP operational plans and guidelines including a monitoring framework as informed by the WHO global guidance and the findings from the demonstration projects.

In Eswatini, PrEP is offered to eligible, HIV-negative individuals who are at substantial risk of acquiring HIV infection. However, the following eight populations are prioritized: Adolescent girls and young women (16-24 years), pregnant and lactating women, serodiscordant couples, Sex workers, Men Who Have Sex with Men (MSM), clients with sexually transmitted infections (STIs), males (30-34 years) and transgender people. Eswatini moved away from giving PrEP to target populations to avoid stigmatization as was experienced in countries that introduced PrEP targeting key populations.

To read more of this report, click here

https://www.afro.who.int/countries/eswatini/news/eswatini-increases-hiv-preventative-options-reduce-new-infections

 

Ludzidzini Council member Ncumbi Maziya investigated for allegedly defrauding SRA R3.8million taxes in King Mswati’s name

By Zweli Martin Dlamini, Swaziland News, 14 September, 2023

SOURCE 

MBABANE: Ncumbi Maziya, the powerful, influential and politically connected member of the Ludzidzini Council is a subject of a high level investigation by the Eswatini Revenue Authority (ERA), for allegedly defrauding the institution taxes in transactions amounting to over R3.8million.

Reached for comments by this Swaziland News, Vusi Dlamini, the Eswatini Revenue Authority Director of Communications said, the revenue institution was restricted by the law to discuss this matter with the media except in a court of law.

“Unfortunately as the Eswatini Revenue Service (ERS),we do not discuss issues of our clients in the public domain except in a Court of Law. This prohibition is provided in the Legislation we administer as well as ERS Policies. So even in this case this prohibition applies”, said the Communications Director. 

But an independent investigation conducted by this Swaziland News uncovered that, between the period of 2018 and 2020, the Ludzidzini Council member ‘smuggled’ goods through his various companies, in the process, he allegedly misrepresented to the revenue authority that, the goods or services procured, belonged to King Mswati who is exempted from paying tax. 

Documentary evidence obtained during the course of an investigation by this publication suggest that, on or around the 23rd September 2020, through his N-Plus Logistics (PTY) LTD trading as First World Material, the Ludzidzini Council powerful member allegedly smuggled a Tele-transmission Outward worth one hundred and eighty-three thousand Rands, eight hundred and twenty-nine, eighty-five cents(R183,829.85) without paying tax due to revenue authority.

According to the documents, the King’s man allegedly purchased the Transmission from Foshan Xinmel Ceramic Co. Ltd, a company based in China.

But before that, on or around 11th November 2019, Maziya’s All Sorts Enterprises defrauded the revenue authority by failing to declare invoice number 20190401A01 worth four hundred and nine-five thousand, two hundred and fifty Rands(R495,250.00), again the product was described in the invoice as “Tele-transmission Outward”.

Part of the evidence further suggests that,on or around the 14th July 2020, the Ludzidzini Council member allegedly smuggled another Tele-transmission Outward ZYD worth $32,294.40 and/or five hundred and nine-four thousand Rands, six hundred two, twenty-five cents(R594,602.25).

Ncumbi Maziya,the politically connected Ludzidzini Council member avoided questions from this publication, he failed to respond to a questionnaire sent to him seeking clarity regarding the matter or the ongoing investigation.

Responding to questions from this publication, Chief Mdlaka Gamedze, the Chairman of the Ludzidzini Council said, it’s hard to disclose what might happen to Maziya as the matter, in question, was still a subject of an investigation.

“It’s an investigation, so we don’t know what will happen to him thereafter”, said the Chairman of the Ludzidzini Council when speaking to publication on Tuesday evening.

But one of Mswati’s senior bodyguards told this publication that, Maziya tried to approach Prince Majaha to help him mitigate before the King(Kutigicita eNkhosini) regarding the matter, however, the Prince is said to have refused citing the seriousness of the matter.

“It’s a serious matter that angered the King, these days iNkhosi itsi lebantfu labaganga ngeligama layo bayicabanisa naleSive. Waganga ngentfo letsintsa imali-ke maye Babe!!! konakele, lona nje use usenkingeni besazama kufihla nalama TLB, SRA ufuna kumudla. It’s a serious matter, Ncumbi even tried to approach Majaha to assist him mitigate before the King but Majaha refused, saying he doesn’t want to involve himself considering the seriousness of the matter”, said the royal insider.

A questionnaire was sent to Prince Majaha after consistent efforts to contact him, however, he had not responded at the time of compiling this report.

Reached for comments, King Mswati’s Spokesperson Percy Simelane described tax evasion as a criminal offense adding that, using the King’s name to obtain favors amounts to extortion.

“Tax evasion is of criminal nature and using the King's name in vain to get favours appears to be extortion to us. Unfortunately both are normally done behind closed doors away from the public eye and it is difficult to know what exactly happened in the alleged maneuvers in question. We beg not to pretend we know what exactly happened and why lest we contaminate the alleged investigation,” said the King’s Spokesperson.

 

Primary elections: EBD censors journalists

By Sabelo Ndzinisa, eSwatini News, 9 September 2023

SOURCE 

MBABANE: A free press is one of the conditions of a ‘free and fair elections’.

Journalists have a duty to ensure that the election process is free and fair. They are sometimes referred to as members of the fourth estate as they have a duty to hold people in authority accountable for their actions.

On August 26, which was the day for the primary elections, thousands of emaSwati left the comfort of their homes to participate in the general elections.

They were counting on journalists to give them updated information on the proceedings countrywide for both print and social media. If journalists had not reported on the events at the primary elections, the public would have to depend only on official results. The public would also be deprived of knowing the details of the voting process.
World over, it is the duty of journalists to inform the public about the proceedings during elections. Their role is so important that according to the Southern African Development Community (SADC) protocols, censoring journalists who are covering the elections could result in the process being viewed as not free and fair. A free and fair election process is a cornerstone of democracy.

However, during recent primary elections, many journalists complained of being barred from covering the elections despite having received full accreditation to do so. This was because officials at some polling stations had requested that journalists should sign secrecy forms before they could be allowed to carry out their duties. Journalists need accreditation to cover general elections because it is a way to ensure that they have direct access to information at the polling station. This enables all journalists to freely work and cover the whole electoral process wherever.

Though accreditation is meant to ensure that journalists have direct access to information at the polling station, generally, all journalists are allowed to cover the electoral process.

However, despite this, journalists who were on duty covering the primary elections are said to have been forced to sign secrecy forms. Officials at the various polling stations demanded that the journalists sign the secrecy forms before they could be allowed to go about their duties. It was the first time journalists reported of being forced to sign secrecy forms. In the previous general elections in 2018, no journalists had reported that they were asked to sign secrecy forms by officials stationed at the polling stations.

Some of the polling stations where journalists signed secrecy forms include Mangweni High School under Mhlangatane and also Ludzibini High School under Timphisini. At Mangweni, an official there said journalists were free to report but they could only do so after completing the secrecy form and getting it signed by a commissioner of oaths, such as an authorised police officer.

Journalists who were covering the elections from this publication then had to complete the forms and had them signed by a police officer who held the rank of sergeant. At Ludzibini polling station, a police inspector signed as the commissioner of oaths after and EBC official insisted there that journalists should not be allowed to cover the elections without completing the secrecy forms. In fact, at one of the polling stations, a journalist reported how she was asked to speak out the oath before completing the secrecy form.

Journalists complained that it appeared officials were not consistent in insisting that journalists sign the secrecy form and if this was legal. The journalists said it was strange that while certain polling stations wanted journalists to sign the secrecy forms, some journalists were allowed coverage without being asked to complete the secrecy forms.
Mbonisi Bhembe, the Communications Officer of the Elections and Boundaries Commission (EBC) said it was the Elections Act that prevented people from taking photos. He was asked if in this case it also applied to journalists. His response was that if the law states that ‘no person shall take pictures’, it includes every person. “You should read the law,” he advised.

Bhembe responded after he was asked about the secrecy form. He said this was the essence of the secrecy form that one was not allowed to reveal any information until a court allows you to do so. “Those given to sign secrecy forms could even be called upon to answer in court.” said Bhembe. He said at polling stations, journalists are only given a few moments at the polling station. He said, however, that should a journalist want to get into a poling station and sit, that person should sign the secrecy form.

Noteworthy, during the counting process, journalists normally sit in the polling stations. This, they do so that they are able to report efficiently on the counting. Other journalists also complained of being prevented from working efficiently by police officers. In one of the polling stations, a police officer had locked the gate on a journalist but later opened it after an EBC official intervened.

 

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